Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: bobcat on June 13, 2012, 03:00:13 PMQuote from: Bigshooter on June 13, 2012, 02:41:03 PMOne easy way to improve the odds. Would be to cut the amount of choices we get in half. For quality go to one choice and for buck/bull go to two choices. WDFW still get the same amount of money but the draw odds will get a better.Doing that would improve odds for some permits, but make it worse for others. Overall, I believe it wouldn't help odds at all. Same number of people applying, same number of permits available = same odds. Right?You want to really improve odds- make it so a person can only apply in one category per species. So for elk, if you want to apply for a quality permit, you can't also apply for a "regular" bull permit or an antlerless permit. Odds for the non-quality permits would go way up. Quality permits would probably stay about the same.The other good way of improving odds is to make it more expensive. Well, they did that already. So there's not much left that can be done. Limiting the number of permits a person can apply for will decrease revenue to the state, so that will never happen. (expect maybe when/if the economy ever gets better)Completely wrong, cutting the choices in half does make the odds better. Think if you have 4 choices for 100 people that is potentially 400 different tags. If they have 2 choices now that is only 200 potential tag differences. It would make a huge difference, almost like the way it was before with 1 choice, either bull or cow etc....
Quote from: Bigshooter on June 13, 2012, 02:41:03 PMOne easy way to improve the odds. Would be to cut the amount of choices we get in half. For quality go to one choice and for buck/bull go to two choices. WDFW still get the same amount of money but the draw odds will get a better.Doing that would improve odds for some permits, but make it worse for others. Overall, I believe it wouldn't help odds at all. Same number of people applying, same number of permits available = same odds. Right?You want to really improve odds- make it so a person can only apply in one category per species. So for elk, if you want to apply for a quality permit, you can't also apply for a "regular" bull permit or an antlerless permit. Odds for the non-quality permits would go way up. Quality permits would probably stay about the same.The other good way of improving odds is to make it more expensive. Well, they did that already. So there's not much left that can be done. Limiting the number of permits a person can apply for will decrease revenue to the state, so that will never happen. (expect maybe when/if the economy ever gets better)
One easy way to improve the odds. Would be to cut the amount of choices we get in half. For quality go to one choice and for buck/bull go to two choices. WDFW still get the same amount of money but the draw odds will get a better.
Quote from: bigelk1030 on June 13, 2012, 03:09:35 PMI am with you on the draw, I have the full 17 points for all the elk categories. This is good and bad, admittedly I am ghosting the cow tags now because I would hate to burn one if I was drawn for a bull tag. For bulls, I have put in every year for modern rifle Margaret and Green River and never a draw. My plan is to continue the same. Sad to think that that I haven't been drawn for 17 years.............If I were you I would ghost your bull tags until after you draw your cow tag then you could continue to accrue points for another cow.
I am with you on the draw, I have the full 17 points for all the elk categories. This is good and bad, admittedly I am ghosting the cow tags now because I would hate to burn one if I was drawn for a bull tag. For bulls, I have put in every year for modern rifle Margaret and Green River and never a draw. My plan is to continue the same. Sad to think that that I haven't been drawn for 17 years.............
No story here, but why don't you just hunt the NE corner during the rut? 10 years of hunting/scouting in the NE corner and you would've had some good bucks by now.
I think a person should only be able to apply for one permit per species per year. How many permits are wasted because somebody drew two permits? I'm guilty of doing it the last couple years only because I drew a quality deer permit two years ago so my chances of drawing it again are extremely small. Possible, but not likely. But, that would be a rule I could easily live with. Accrue points in the other categories by ghosting. I drew the 204 buck permit this year but I had 14 points. I also agree with the point that when they split into this category system and your points were put into each that I started putting in for permits that I never would have before. I have hunted whitetails for years in the NE but saw this as a chance to hunt some different country. I know what it feels like to have a "stranger" hunting an area you know very well but can't draw the permit to hunt there yourself. We hunted a unit for over 20 years and did very well. Then the game department decided to turn it into a permit area about ten years ago and none of us have drawn it since.
WDFW created the problem to begin with. With all the choices, it opens Pandora's box. Should have been ONE choice and ONE choice only for areas. That way the odds were in our favor. For the most part with the exception of hard to draw hunts, we got our favorite area(s) every couple years. Now with all the choices and pile on that, all the doe/cow hunters retaining their antlerless points while putting in for buck, bull or quality, the odds are in the next galaxy.That's exactly why you number went from 1000 applying for your hunt to 2500. Just remember....more choices equal more revenue, but it also reduces everyone's opportunity to hunt their favorite draw. With the way things are now if you do get drawn, you'll be waiting forever to draw again. Add to that the increased cost to just buy a chance.....wildlife management at it's worst.
Quote from: Wacenturion on June 13, 2012, 11:27:03 PMWDFW created the problem to begin with. With all the choices, it opens Pandora's box. Should have been ONE choice and ONE choice only for areas. That way the odds were in our favor. For the most part with the exception of hard to draw hunts, we got our favorite area(s) every couple years. Now with all the choices and pile on that, all the doe/cow hunters retaining their antlerless points while putting in for buck, bull or quality, the odds are in the next galaxy.That's exactly why you number went from 1000 applying for your hunt to 2500. Just remember....more choices equal more revenue, but it also reduces everyone's opportunity to hunt their favorite draw. With the way things are now if you do get drawn, you'll be waiting forever to draw again. Add to that the increased cost to just buy a chance.....wildlife management at it's worst.As point systems work in the west NV may have a better system but followed by WA.. try the other states its a joke. In UT some are 20+ points now..what if u were born today and become a hunter? your screwed!! I see a major overhaul in point systems in some states and resulting in many angry hunters
Quote from: Shantytrey on June 13, 2012, 09:50:28 PMQuote from: bobcat on June 13, 2012, 03:00:13 PMQuote from: Bigshooter on June 13, 2012, 02:41:03 PMOne easy way to improve the odds. Would be to cut the amount of choices we get in half. For quality go to one choice and for buck/bull go to two choices. WDFW still get the same amount of money but the draw odds will get a better.Doing that would improve odds for some permits, but make it worse for others. Overall, I believe it wouldn't help odds at all. Same number of people applying, same number of permits available = same odds. Right?You want to really improve odds- make it so a person can only apply in one category per species. So for elk, if you want to apply for a quality permit, you can't also apply for a "regular" bull permit or an antlerless permit. Odds for the non-quality permits would go way up. Quality permits would probably stay about the same.The other good way of improving odds is to make it more expensive. Well, they did that already. So there's not much left that can be done. Limiting the number of permits a person can apply for will decrease revenue to the state, so that will never happen. (expect maybe when/if the economy ever gets better)Completely wrong, cutting the choices in half does make the odds better. Think if you have 4 choices for 100 people that is potentially 400 different tags. If they have 2 choices now that is only 200 potential tag differences. It would make a huge difference, almost like the way it was before with 1 choice, either bull or cow etc....That's your opinion, I will stick with mine. Unless you have some sort of college degree in statistics and can prove it to me. Say there are 5,000 people that apply in the quality deer permit category. And say there are a total of 100 permits, just for easy math. Not taking points into account, odds are 1 in 50, meaning 1 person out of every 50 who apply will draw a permit. How will that change by giving each person more or less choices on their application? The way I see it, overall odds in the quality deer permit category, are going to be 1 in 50, whether each person can choose 1 hunt, 2 hunts, or 10 hunts on their application.